School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois, USA.
Crop BioProtection Research Unit, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, USDA-ARS, Peoria, Illinois, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Nov 5;12(11):e0086124. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.00861-24. Epub 2024 Oct 7.
Understanding factors influencing the composition and maintenance of beneficial host-associated microbial communities is central to understanding their ecological, evolutionary, and health consequences for hosts. Host immunity is often implicated as a regulator of these microbiota, but immunity may also play a disruptive role, with responses to infection perturbing beneficial communities. Such effects may be more prominent from innate immune responses, with more rapid-acting and often non-specific components, compared to adaptive responses. We investigated how upregulation of antibacterial immunity in the bumble bee affects its core gut microbiota, testing the hypothesis that immunity-induced perturbation impacts the microbiota structure. Freshly emerged adult bees were fed a microbiota inoculum before receiving a non-pathogenic immune stimulation injection. We quantified microbial communities using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and targeted quantitative PCR. Coarse community membership shows apparent robustness, but we find that immune stimulation alters the abundance of two core community members, and . Moreover, a positive association in communities between these bacteria is perturbed following a Gram-negative challenge. The observed changes in the gut microbial community are suggestive of immune response-induced dysbiosis, linking ecological interactions across levels between hosts, their pathogens, and their beneficial gut microbiota. The potential for collateral perturbation of the natural gut microbiota following an innate immune response may contribute to immune costs, shaping the evolutionary optimization of immune investment depending on the ecological context.
Our work demonstrates how innate immunity may influence the host-associated microbiota. While previous work has demonstrated the role of adaptive immunity in regulating the microbiota, we show that stimulation of an innate immune response in bumble bees may disrupt the native gut microbial community by shifting individual abundances of some members and pairwise associations. This work builds upon previous work in bumble bees demonstrating factors determining microbe colonization of hosts and microbiota membership, implicating immune response-induced changes as a factor shaping these important gut communities. While some microbiota members appear unaffected, changes in others and the community overall suggests that collateral perturbation of the native gut microbiota upon an innate immune response may serve as an additional selective pressure that shapes the evolution of host innate immunity.
了解影响有益宿主相关微生物群落组成和维持的因素对于理解它们对宿主的生态、进化和健康后果至关重要。宿主免疫通常被认为是调节这些微生物群落的因素,但免疫也可能发挥破坏性作用,感染反应会扰乱有益的群落。与适应性反应相比,这种效应可能更为突出,因为先天免疫反应具有更快的作用速度和通常更非特异性的成分。我们研究了在熊蜂中上调抗菌免疫作用如何影响其核心肠道微生物群,检验了免疫诱导的扰动是否会影响微生物群落结构的假设。在接受非致病性免疫刺激注射之前,新孵化的成年蜜蜂被喂食微生物接种物。我们使用 16S rRNA 扩增子测序和靶向定量 PCR 来量化微生物群落。粗社区成员关系显示出明显的稳健性,但我们发现免疫刺激改变了两个核心社区成员的丰度, 和.此外,在革兰氏阴性菌挑战后,这些细菌在群落中的正相关关系受到干扰。肠道微生物群落的观察到的变化表明免疫反应诱导的失调,将宿主与其病原体和有益的肠道微生物群之间的生态相互作用联系在一起。在先天免疫反应后,天然肠道微生物群可能会受到附带的干扰,这可能会导致免疫成本,从而根据生态背景塑造免疫投资的进化优化。